14 GOINGS ON ABOUT TOWN to 6.). . . INTERNATIONAL CENTER OF PHOTOGRAPHY 1130 Fifth Ave., at 94th St.: Bruce David son's twelve photo-essays here include "Brooklyn Gang," from 1959, "East 100th Street," from the late sixties and "The Cafe- . " , tena, made three years ago on the lower East Side. Two films by Mr. Davidson, "Isaac Singer's Nightmare and Mrs. Pupko's Beard" (twenty-eight minutes) and "Living Off the Land" (twenty minutes) t can be seen Tues- days through Fridays at 2 :30, and Saturdays and Sundays at 2 :30 and 3 :45. . . . fjf Lynn Davis and Robert Mapplethorpe are exhibit- ing photographs they made of identical sub- jects. (Open Sundays.) Both shows through April 22. . . . NEIKRUG. 224 E. 68th St.: Forty young Australians showing photographs of the aborigines, coral reefs, desert vegetation, and small-town life on their continent. Through Saturday, April 7. (Wednesdays through Saturdays, 1 to 6.)... THE NEW MU- SEUM. 65 Fifth Ave., at 14th St.: "The In- vented Landscape" includes works by ten con- temporary photographers. Through Saturday April 14. (Opens weekdays at noon; ope Wednesday evenings until 8.)...26 FEDERAL PLAZA. at Foley Square: In the lobby of this building is a large show of works by André Kertész, Lilo Raymond, and forty-eight oth- ers. Through April 25 (Mondays through Fridays, 9 to 5.).. . WITKIN. 41 E. 57th St.: This gallery is celebrating its tenth anniver- sary with a big show (a hundred and fifty prints) by big names (fifty photographers are included). Through May 5. MUSEUMS AND LIBRARIES METROPOLITAN MUSEUM. Fifth Ave. at 82nd St.- King Tut, of course. Through April 15. . . . fjf -,\nexhibi of sixty-four sixteenth-century ItalIan drawIngs from the Lehman Collection. Through June 17.... fjf Rembrandt etchings and drawings illustrating scenes from the Bi- ble Starts Thursday, April 5. (Open daily except Mondays. Hours: Tuesdays, 10 to 8 :45; Wednesdays through Saturdays, 10 to 4 :45; Sundays, lIto 4 :45.) MUSEUM OF MODERN ART. 11 W. 53rd St.- Twenty-two paintings that were part of the Edvard Munch exhibit at the National Gal- lery of Art, in Washington. Also other Munch paintings and prints. Through April 24. . . . fjf "Transformations in Modern Ar- chitecture," a show of primarily black-and- white photographs of buildipgs constructed in the past twenty years. Through April 24. . . . fjf Ten small unpainted maquettes by Frank Stella. Through May I. . . . PHOTOGRA- PHY: About forty pictures taken in the sixties by Robert Adams. Through May 1. (Open daily, except Wednesdays, 1 I to 6, and Thurs- day evenings until 9.) GUGGENHEIM MUSEUM. 1071 Fifth Ave., at 89th St.-"The Planar Dimension: Europe [9 12 - 193 2 " is an exhibit that examines the syn- thesis of painting and sculpture in works of art on more than one plane. Picasso, Archi- penko, Calder, Lissitzky, and others are represented. Through May 6.... fjf A show of thirty-five works by Piet Mondrian, dating mostly from the twenties and thirties. Through May 6... . <<1J A selection of paint- ings by artists who worked in France in the first half of this century, among them Matisse, Gris, ViIlon, and Picabia. (Open daily except - ---- -- ...... -. '. ý --' I #' <! II -// S-MeT-W- 8' 9 /10 I T-F-S I: II: I 7 14 Mondays. Hours: Tuesdays, lIto 8, with no admission charge from 5 to 8; Wednesdays through Sundays, [I to 5.) WHITNEY MUSEUM OF AMERICAN ART. 945 Madison }\ve., at 75th St.-The remaining portion of the 1979 biennial exhibition will close Sun- day, April 8. (Open daily except Mondays. Hours: Tuesdays, 1 I to 9, with no admission charge after 6; Wednesdays through Satur- days, lIto 6; Sundays, noon to 6.) WHITNEY DOWNTOWN MUSEUM. 55 Water St., two blocks south of Wall St.-"Auto-Icons" is an exhibit of paintings, sculptures, photographs, and prints by artists (RosenquIst, Sonneman, Oldenburg, Linn, among them) who were in- spired by the automobile. Through Wednes- day, April I!. (Open Mondays through Fri- days, 1 I to 3.) BROOKLYN MUSEUM. Eastern Parkway-A retro- spective of the paintings, reliefs, and draw- ings of Ben Nicholson Through May 13.. . . <<1J Paintings, drawings, and sculptures by four BritIsh Victorian artists: George Fred- eric Watts) Frederic Leighton, Albert Moore, and Alfred Gilbert. Through Sunday, A..pril 8. (Open Wednesdays through Saturdays, 10 to 5; Sundays, noon to 5.) CHINA HOUSE. 125 E. 65th St.-A show of eighty-two objects that date from the Han dynasty (206 B.C. to 220 A.D.), including painted tiles, stone carvings, dressing-table items, bronze vases, and, among the ming ch'i, models of horses, acrobats, dragons, and houses. Through May 27. (Open daily except Friday, April 13. Hours: Mondays through Fridays, 10 to 5; Saturdays, lItO 5; Sun- days, 2 to 5.) COOPER-HEWITT MUSEUM. Fifth Ave. at 91st St.- An exhibit in which the Japanese concept ma-which holds that time and space are identical-is exemplified by a half-scale mod- el of a teahouse, by part of a Noh stage, and by a number of other works, including sculp- tures, prints, and photographs of architecture. Through May 27. . . . fjf A selection of porce- lains from the museum's collections includes some very early Chinese examples and some choice eighteenth-century pieces, such as part of a Meissen swan service designed for Count von Brühl; pieces from a Sèvres ser- vice made for Madame Du Barry; and Chel- sea plates. Through May 13. (Open daily ex- cept Mondays. Hours: Tuesdays, [0 to 9, with no admission charge after 5; Wednesdays through Saturdays, 10 to 5; Sundays, noon to 5.) JEWISH MUSEUM. Fifth Ave. at 92nd St.-A retrospective of the paintings, drawings, and graphics of Arik Brauer, an artist associated with the Vienna school of Fantastic Realism. Through April 29 (Open daily except Fri- days and Saturdays, and Thursday, April 12. Hours: Mondays through Thursdays, noon to 5; Sundays, I I to 6 ) MORGAN liBRARY. 29 E. 36th St.-A display vf A '1 gO II ClJlILØQua . . , '... """'" -... / (/ y/ ø - // /- ; ,,-4 .--- " -- ..,.,.- ...<- . Fl more than a hundred handmade bookbindings, representing the full range of the library's collection, in such materials as gold, silver, and ivory Through Sunday, April 8.... <<1J More than three dozen single leaves from medieval and Renais ance illuminated manu- scripts, one of them from a Bible illuminated at St. Swithin's Priory, Winchester, England, in the last quarter of the twelfth century. Through Saturday, A..pril 14. (Open daily except Mondays. Hours: Tuesdays through Saturdays, 10 :30 to 5; Sundays, I to 5.) MUSEUM OF AMERICAN FOLK ART. 49 W. 53rd St.- "The Woman Folk Artist in A..merica," a display of paintings, drawings, and textiles Through April 29 (Open daily, except Mon- days, 10 :30 to 5 :30, and Thursday evenings until 8.) MUSEUM OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK, Fifth Ave at 104th St.-Mrs. John Jay's white satin shoes (circa 1785) and a red straw hat that Sally Victor designed in 1942 are part of a sizable collection of shoes and hats on view here. . . . PHOTOGRAPHY: N ew York City in pictures over the past hundred and thirty vears. Through June 17. (Open daily except Mondays. Hours: Tuesdays through Saturdays, 10 to 5; Sun- days, 1 to 5.) EXPERIMENTAL OUTPOSTS (Various avant-garde enterprises that may in- volve not only traditional art but video elec- tronics, dance, and so on.) , ARTISTS SPACE. 105 Hudson St, at Franklin St. 226-3970. Exhibition hours: Tuesdays th ou.gh Saturdays, I I to 6.-Drawings, paIntIngs, and photographs by four artists from Scotland (James Birrell Michael Da- vey, Gareth Fisher, and Thomas Lawson) through April 21. ' FRANKLIN FURNACE. 112 Franklin St. Q 2 5-467I. Exhibition hours: Tuesdays through Satur- days, noon to 6.- Jeffrey Lohn (perform- ance), Tuesday, April 10, at 8:30 and 10; Kar n Harper (performance), Thursday, AprIl [2, at 8 :30; Judith Simonian and Bruce Fier showing one-of-a-kind bookworks, through Saturday, April 14; a display of cor- respondence related to Eleanor Antin's "100 Boots" project, through April 28 THE KITCHEN. 484 Broome St. 925-3615. Exhibi- tion hours: Tuesdays through Saturdays I to 6.-Margaret Fisher and others (da ce), Thursday through Saturday, April 5-7, at 8 :3 ; Peter Rose (performance), Sunday, Apnl 8, at 3 and 8 :30; Laurie Anderson (performance), Friday and Saturday, April 13- 1 4, at 8 :30; Troy Brauntuch (drawings a ld manipulated prints), through April 21; vIdeotapes by five artists, through Friday April 13; "The Record as A..rtwork," an ex hibit of more than a hundred and fifty rec- ords and record covers produced bv such art- ists as Duchamp, Schwitters, and Beuys, starts Friday, April 13. MUSIC (The box-office number for the Metropolitan Opera House is 580-9830, for Avery Fisher Hall 874-2424, for Carnegie Hall 247-7459 and for Alice Tully Hall 362-1911. Other box- ffice numbers are included in the listings.) OPERA METROPOLITAN OPERA-Final performances of the season-Wednesday, April 4, at 8: "Der Fliegende HoIlãnder," with Carol Neblett, Donald McIntyre, William Lewis and Paul Plishka: conducted by James Levine.... <<1J Thursday, April 5, at 8: "Norma" with Shirley V errett, Elena Obraztsova,' Carlo Cossutta, and John Macurdy; Peter Maag. . . . <<1J Friday, April 6, at 7: "Parsifal," with Christa Ludwig, Jon Vickers, Bernd Weikl, and Martti Tal vela; James Levine. . . . fjf Sat- urday, April 7, at 2 :30: "Der Fliegende Hol- lãnder," with Carol Neblett, Donald McIn- tyre! William Lewis, and Paul Plishka; James LevIne. . . . fjf Saturday, April 7, at 8: "Eu- gene Onegin" with Makvala Kasrashvili, Y uri Mazurok, Nicolai Gedda, Paul Plishka, and Isola Jones; N aami Yarvi. . . . fjf Monday April 9, at 8: "Norma," with Shirley Verrett: Elena Ohraztsova, Carlo Cossutta, and John Macurdy; Peter Maag. . . . <<1J Tuesday, April 10, at 7: "Parsifal," with Mignon Dunn Jon Vickers Bernd Weikl, and Martti Talvela' J ames Levine. . . . fjf Wednesday, April 11, at